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"Examples
of highly divergent forms possessing one and the same DNA are so
conspicuous and so numerous that the marvel is that they have attracted
so little attention. As a symbol of morphological diversity emerging
from genetic identity we can take the caterpillar and the butterfly.
There is nothing in which one resembles the other:
"The caterpillar is torpid; it crawls; it is usually dull-colored; its
mouth has a chewing apparatus; its body is monotonously segmented, with
all those hooks for feet. What we call metamorphosis is not really a
change in form. Once the pupa or chrysalis stage is reached, the
caterpillar starts emptying itself; its organs dissolve, and its outer
covering is shed. Only certain groups of cells, called imaginal disks,
remain vital. From these develop all the structures of the adult (the
"imago"): antennae, stylets, proboscis, eyes, articulated legs, wings,
and the fluttering lightness that warrants calling the butterfly
"psyche."
"Caterpillar and butterfly are widely differing forms, the one not
derived from the other but both from totipotent embryo cells, some of
which the caterpillar retains in its body so that they will in due
course destroy it and replace it with another. The process of
substituting the butterfly for the caterpillar is stimulated by
adenotropic and ecdysic hormones and is repressed by a neotenic hormone.
But the effects of these hormones are the simplest and most non-specific
imaginable; and it is certainly not they that build the marvelous design
of the butterfly on the corpse of a caterpillar. DNA may lend itself to
such diverse forms, but it is not the DNA that imposes the blueprint,
nor is it the hormones that do the organizing. Instead, it is one or
more morphological destinies, lying in wait somewhere until they can one
day reveal themselves."
* Giuseppe Semonti, Why is a Fly
Not a Horse?, (Seattle: Discovery Institute Press, 2005) 102, 103;
Available through Access Research Network (www.ARN.org
and Discovery Institute
www.discovery.org. |
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